Editorâs note: This post contains spoilers for the latest episode of The Flash! Proceed with caution, speedsters. For reals, if you havenât yet watched this weekâs season premiere, âFlashpoint,â we highly suggest you do so before proceeding. Okay? We good? Letâs go.
The worldâs most popular superhero TV show is back for its third season. And Iâll admit I was worried. Not so much about what fate would befall Barry and his friends when he altered the timeline in an effort to save his mom at the end of season 2, to save his mom from the Reverse-Flash, but about season 3âs overall direction. The Flash, like most of Greg Berlantiâs productions, has never been afraid to wear its heart on its sleeve. But all too frequently in its first two seasons that emotional honesty was worn thin by one too many tears shed by its hero. With almost all of those crying sessions over the loss of Nora Allen and the resulting imprisonment of Barryâs dad. So when Henry died at the super-speed-vibrating hand of Zoom in season 2âs finale, dread washed over me like a tidal wave. Would we now be subjected to an entire season of Barry mourning his dad?
The answer which immediately followed didnât offer a much better scenario. By saving his mom, Barry had also saved his dad, which all but guaranteed season 3 would mainly focus on Barry relationship with his parents. Forcing him to remember what they meant to him, and forcing us to endure scene after scene of maudlin anguish when they were inevitably taken from him once more. It might make me sound like a bastard, but I practically stood up and cheered when I realized this would not be the case — When the problems caused by Barryâs decision force him in the season 3 premiere to ask the Reverse-Flash to kill his mom again.
Those problems also account for all of the great character beats in âFlashpoint.â Itâs an episode fleeter of foot than one would think given its premise, based on the famed Flash comic book storyline. Described as a âReverse Itâs a Wonderful Lifeâ by the evil Eobard Thawne, Barryâs new reality sees Wally serving as Central Cityâs champion speedster in the iconic yellow costume of Kid Flash (even if he hates the nom de plume the media has given him). Iris, a stranger now to Barry, is her brotherâs partner, which gives her a great deal more agency than weâve seen her have throughout this series. Meanwhile, Cisco is a billionaire tech mogul running Ramon Industries and Caitlin is happily employed as a pediatric eye doctor who wears flats instead of her trademark heels. Joe, however, always the showâs most sympathetic character, hasnât been faring all that well; and his attitude towards his kidsâ crime-fighting prefigures the new status his relationship with Iris attains in this episodeâs closing scene.
For even though Barry restores the timeline before its damage is irreversible, heâs opened up a whole new can of worms. And a new villain, Doctor Alchemy â one of the few remaining members of his rogues gallery whoâd not yet debuted on the show â has emerged to threaten his city, allying himself with The Rival. It remains to be seen what personal stakes heâll present for Barry, but whatever they are, Iâm cool with then as long as they donât prompt our boy to engage in another endless display of waterworks over his folks. Because, as âFlashpointâ so well illustrates, even those defined by a loss as great as Barryâs need to one day accept ther own reality.
Accelerated Particles
â Edward Clariss, a.k.a. The Rival, first appeared all the way back in 1949âs Flash Comics #104, as an enemy of the original Golden Age Flash, Jay Garrick. As much as I appreciate the nod to history, I kind of wish season 3âs first new baddie wasnât yet another speedster, and a more generic one than Reverse-Flash or Zoom. Plus, his costume makes him look like a fish.
â Carlos Valdes may give his best performance yet as Ciscoâs slick counterpart who dates models a foot taller than him.
â âHave I been kidnapped?â âUnclear.â
â âFlashpointââs final battle recalls Barryâs first super showdown, in the showâs pilot episode, with the Weather Wizard.
â Can our own Caitlin get herself a pair of sensible shoes to wear now that precedent has been established?
â âToday I get to be the hero.â
What did you think of this weekâs episode? Let me know in the comments below or on Twitter (@JMaCabre).
Images: The CW